3 Novels by Lance Horner
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Overview: Lance Horner found success, and a degree of notoriety, late in life with the publication of the Falcon-hurst series, historical fiction of a most sensational sort about the slaves and the slave owners on a sprawling slave-breeding plantation in pre- and post-Civil War Alabama. Horner had been an advertising man with one novel to his credit when he collaborated with a septuagenarian dog-show judge named Kyle Onstott on the creation of the best-selling saga, which began with Mandingo, published in 1957. Drum followed in 1962 and then an assortment of sequels, written by Horner alone (Onstott died in 1966) and later by Harry Whit-tington (writing as Ashley Carter) after Horner passed away in 1973.
Filled with ostensibly authentic historical detail, the episodic narratives centered on various periods in the life of the decadent Hammond Maxwell, from youth through his tumultuous reign as master of Falconhurst. The topics presented a kind of savage “upstairs-downstairs” view of plantation life, dramatizing the brutality, selfishness, and sexual perversity of the whites and the suffering, anger, degradation, and sexual hunger of the blacks. The Falconhurst topics were at least nominally sympathetic to the enslaved and condemnatory of slavery and the slave-owning class, although the scenes of torture, rape, and sexual subjugation were presented with an enthusiasm worthy of a psychotic Klansman. Then again, no proper racist could take much satisfaction in the series cast of depraved, slavering white people nor in the depiction of the constant sexual allure, often consummated, between virile slaves and Caucasian Southern females. The bloody retribution of the blacks in Drum’s apocalyptic slave revolt might also have caused some discomfort for the reader/bigot.
Whether the authors hoped to deliver some kind of message in their violent, erotic saga is not entirely clear. Away from Falconhurst, Horner showed a continued interest in slavery in novels set in ancient Rome, and Onstott’s previous topics—the ones not about beekeeping—did concern breeding, although the focus was on dogs and not humans. The timing of the series, just as the civil rights movement and violent opposition to it were catching fire in the united States, may have fanned the topics’ popularity, but to most of the millions of readers of the series, it was likely enjoyed merely as titillating, taboo-busting entertainment with a nihilistic edge. Excessive and semipornographic as the Falconhurst series was, it could at least be credited as a bracing alternative to that earlier best-seller about the antebellum South, Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind (1936), and its sentimental fantasy of benevolent slavers, maternal mammies, and devoted field hands.
Genre: Historical Fiction | Erotic
Golden Stud
This Was Bricktop……bastard offspring of an octoroon wench and a passing stranger. In New Orleans they called him Jeff Carson. No one there suspected that this handsome, red-haired young rogue with the beguiling smile was a runaway black. Certainly not the sex-starved widow who was the key to his new future. Nor Jean Lafitte, the pirate, who trusted him. Not even Chloe, the beautiful slave girl who loved him. No one – not even his mistresses – had ever seen the tell-tale brand on his back; the mark that could betray him to the world. But one person did know who he was. An enemy from his past, waiting for him in New Orleans. Waiting to kill him.
The Street of the Sun
A Clash of Blood Stronger Than Steel. On the teeming Street of the Sun in 18th-century Havana walks a woman fighting for acceptance as a lady — and two men in search of freedom:
—Miguel de Santiago–Who thought he was born free, and crusaded for an idea long before its time had come: Man was not meant to be a slave.
—Enrique de Santiago–Whose illegitimacy created the desire that consumed his twisted life: To free himself by enslaving others.
Rogue Roman
Imperial Rome – centre of the world – throbbing with the white heat of violence, bloodshed and unihibited sexuality…
Bought as an actor, kidnapped by pirates, sold as a gladiator, young Cleon’s beauty and flagrant masculinity made every woman – harlots and vestal virgins alike – desire him. And passion drives Cleon to help destroy a Caesar who combined the vices of his predecessors with his own special perversions – the Emperor Nero…
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Golden Stud (28 MB)
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The Street of the Sun (29 MB)
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Rogue Roman (34 MB)
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Mirror(s)
Golden Stud (28 MB)
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The Street of the Sun (29 MB)
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Rogue Roman (34 MB)
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Kyle Onstott & Lance Horner – Child of the Sun | The Tattooed Road
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